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columbarium

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columbarium

Roman sepulchral chamber. Columbaria were so called because they resembled large dovecotes. They were usually rectangular structures built around open courtyards and lined with niches in which urns containing the ashes of cremated bodies were placed.

Particularly common under the early empire, columbaria were developed from the ancient Etruscan and republican Roman house tomb. They were commonly used for the ashes of the slaves and freedmen of great families, who built and maintained them at their own expense. Others belonged to funeral associations, which guaranteed their members honourable burial; and some were owned by speculators. Examples have been found on the Appian Way. Columbaria became obsolete in the reign of Hadrian (AD 117–38) when burial gradually superseded cremation.

columbarium

In medieval churches, the baldachin (canopy over an altar) beneath which was suspended the hanging pyx (container for sacramental wafers). The latter was frequently in the form of a dove.



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Around him, and in groups, according to their fancy, lying in their mantles, or with their backs against a sort of stone bench, which went all round the columbarium, were to be seen twenty brigands or more, each having his carbine within reach.
 
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